Creating Cherokee Print: Samuel Austin Worcester’s Impact on the Syllabary
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Date
2008
Authors
Thomas, William Joseph
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
East Carolina University
Abstract
The 1821 creation of a written syllabary for the Cherokee language by Sequoyah and its use in the
Nation’s newspaper, the Cherokee Phoenix, are routinely examined within the context of the tribe’s
discourse surrounding removal in the 1830s, but scholars often overlook the influence of the missionary
Samuel Austin Worcester and the American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions (ABCFM) in
shaping the parameters of that discourse by arranging the syllabary, typesetting the characters, and
establishing the press. This article illuminates these significant historical and technical aspects of
Worcester’s influence on the creation of Cherokee print. Worcester’s influence on the Cherokee syllabary
is important, given the enduring nature of his influence and the rapid adoption of the written language:
within fourteen years of its introduction, and seven years of the first printing, more than half of all
households in the Cherokee Nation had a reader of Cherokee. Today, nearly 180 years after Worcester
first standardized Cherokee characters in print, his forms of the syllabic characters guide instruction in
reading and writing Cherokee, and his translation of the Bible into Cherokee persists in Cherokee homes.
Description
Citation
Media History Monographs; 10:2 p. 1-20